A federal appeals court declined Friday to block the decision by a district court judge that the New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk policy is unconstitutional, marking an end to outgoing Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s bid to reverse the ruling.

The three-judge US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
decided against vacating the August decision by US district court
Judge Shira Scheindlin, who ruled the NYPD’s policing method was
unconstitutional under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments.

The Appeals court suggested City attorneys could bring concerns
during an appeal trial next year, though it’s unlikely to occur,
as Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio is expected to drop the City’s
appeal upon taking office on January 1, 2014.

The Second Circuit first delayed in late October Scheindlin’s landmark
ruling pending an appeal, and removed her
from the case citing bias against the City of New York.

Though the City’s initial appeal did not mention judicial misconduct, City
attorneys used Scheindlin’s dismissal as a chance to press for
her ruling to be tossed out completely in a subsequent motion.

"Today's ruling not only confirms that Judge Scheindlin is
removed from the case, but it also rejects her lawyer's
contention that the court lacked relevant information when
issuing that ruling,” said Michael A. Cardozo, New York’s top
legal counsel, in response to the ruling. “The Second Circuit
also made it clear that we could raise the issue of vacating her
ruling when the appeal is heard.”

“The City is moving ahead full speed with its appeal, and we
maintain that the City's police force has acted lawfully in its
application of stop, question and frisk."

Nevertheless, Friday’s decision means an end to current Mayor
Bloomberg’s attempts to reverse Scheindlin’s ruling, which he has
repeatedly excoriated since August while vigorously
defending stop-and-frisk.

"This marks the end of the Bloomberg administration’s unseemly
effort to short-circuit the appeals process and undo the district
court’s rulings before Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio takes
office,” said Christopher Dunn, the New York Civil Liberties
Union’s associate legal director. “Hopefully, the legal
theatrics will now end and we can all go back to the important
task of reforming stop-and-frisk."

Scheindlin found the NYPD’s 4.4 million stops from 2004 to 2012 -
of which 80 percent were black or Hispanic individuals who made
up more than half of total frisks - were done in violation of the
Fourth Amendment and singled out targets for their race,
violating the Fourteenth Amendment.

Scheindlin’s ruling did not end the practice, but demanded
reforms.

“This Court’s mandate is solely to judge the constitutionality
of police behavior, not its effectiveness as a law enforcement
tool,” she wrote in her August 12 opinion.

Scheindlin was removed from the case by the Second Circuit on the
basis that she “improperly urged plaintiffs’ counsel to file
suit as ‘related’ to a 1999 case previously assigned to her and
because of certain media interviews,” S.D.N.Y. Blog reported.

A lawsuit filed in 2004 by four men, all minorities, became the
class action case against stop-and-frisk.

The New York City Council passed, then overrode Bloomberg’s veto, legislation over
the summer that seeks to ban discriminatory profiling within the
NYPD’s stop-and-frisk program and establishes oversight over the
department.

The Community Safety Act includes two pieces of legislation. The
End Discriminatory Profiling Act, passed by a vote of 34-15,
establishes an enforceable ban on profiling and discrimination by
the NYPD and broadens the categories of communities protected to
include age, gender, gender identity and expression, sexual
orientation, immigration status, disability, and housing status,
in addition to race, ethnicity, religion, and national origin.

The NYPD Oversight Act, passed by a margin of 39-10, puts
department oversight responsibility on the Commissioner of the
Department of Investigation. The NYPD does not currently have an
inspector general, whose role will be limited to policy
recommendations to the mayor and NYPD commissioner.

The override of Bloomberg’s veto came ten days after Scheindlin’s
ruling.

New York State Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman released an
extensive analysis this month of stop-and-frisk,
showing just three percent of stops led to convictions, and just
0.1 percent led to convictions for a violent crime.

The report encompassed some 2.4 million stop-and-frisk acts
performed by the NYPD between 2009 and 2012, leading to 150,000
arrests. Of those arrests, 51 percent actually led to convictions
or guilty pleas. The remaining 49 percent led to no prosecution
or a probationary period.

Under Bloomberg, who won his first election in 2001, the
stop-and-frisk program expanded. In 2003, a year after Bloomberg
took office, police stopped and searched 160,851 NYC citizens,
within the next eight years the number of stops grew four-fold,
to 685,724 in 2011.

NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly backed Bloomberg’s policies, saying
the tactics helped to curb crime in the Big Apple, driving
general crime rate down by 30 percent during the billionaire’s
terms in office.

But the fact that police stopped mostly blacks and Latinos, who comprised up
to 87 percent of all police stops in 2011, for instance, led to
widespread opposition to the policy among residents.

Regardless, Bloomberg never relented in defense of the policy,
making several bellicose statements about what could happen in
the city should the policy be curbed, and that charges of racism
were unfounded.

“Some (stop-and-frisk critics) scream that they know better
than you how to run the department,” he said in April. “Some have even sued the
NYPD and demanded a federal monitor over NYPD operations. They’ve
also drafted politically driven legislation that is a reaction to
two NYPD practices: Stop, Question and Frisk; and
counter-terrorism intelligence gathering.

“Make no mistake, this is a dangerous piece of legislation and
anyone who supports it is courting disaster,” Bloomberg went on.
“If you end street stops looking for guns, there will be more
guns on the streets, and more people will be killed. It’s that
simple.”

Yet a report by the NYCLU using the NYPD’s own stop-and-frisk
records indicates a record 685,724 people were stopped and
frisked by police in 2011, while just 780 guns were consequently
recovered.

Although 87 percent of those stopped by the NYPD in 2011 were
black or Latino, the NYCLU report showed that "a weapon was
found in only 1.8 percent of blacks and Latinos frisked, as
compared to a weapon being found in 3.8 percent of whites
frisked."

The steep rise in stop-and-frisk incidents since 2003 is
disproportionate to the number of guns confiscated, the report
found.